Vera-Ellen (1921-1981) should have been one of Broadway and Hollywood’s most enduring stars. She was a fine dramatic and light comedic actress, and was considered by a number of authorities to be the greatest all-around dancer of her generation. And for a brief moment in 1950, she was an American household name, as famous as Babe Ruth, Joe DiMaggio or General Douglas MacArthur.
She could do tap, toe dancing, adagio, modern dance (formerly known as dramatic dancing), comic dancing, partnered dancing, prop dancing, Apache dancing and advanced acrobatics.
"Vera-Ellen growing legion of fans was stunned by the Vera they saw in "Slaughter on Tenth Avenue". The number had been originally staged more comedically by George Balanchine for Ray Bolger in the 1936 Rodgers and Hart stage musical "On Your Toes" and it had also been used in the 1939 film of the same name. Now the number, as staged by Gene Kelly, was serious, different from Bolger's slaphappy dance routine.
"She Tried to Be Good" paperback book cover illustration by Rudy Nappi (1951), a dead ringer for Vera-Ellen
"I asked Vera-Ellen what it was like, to dance with the two greatest male hoofers in the world, what were the differences between them. 'The only difference is what you see on the screen', she told me. She did say, however, that Fred Astaire is the more detached of the two".Source: retrorambling.wordpress.com
Dick Powell, Judy Garland and Gene Kelly on 22nd March 1943 ("For Me and My Gal" - CBS Radio)"The first time Gene Kelly appeared on a stage he had to borrow a tie from screen star Dick Powell. It took him eight years to return it". (Pittsburgh Press, May 16, 1943)
Dick Powell and Claire Trevor in "Murder, My Sweet" (1944) directed by Edward Dmytryk, adapted from the novel "Farewell, My Lovely" by Raymond Chandler
"Black Mask" was created in 1920 by H.L. Mencken and George Jean Nathan, as a lowbrow bookend for the pair's witty and urbane Smart Set. At the late age of forty-five, Raymond Chandler took his first pecks at the typewriter keys, following Dashiell Hammett's path through the pages of "Black Mask". -Eddie Muller
Gene Kelly's character of E.K. Hornbeck represented H.L. Mencken (American journalist, magazine editor and satirist) in the film "Inherit the Wind" (1960), directed by Stanley Kramer.
Gene Kelly and Cyd Charisse in a promotional still of "It's Always Fair Weather" (1955) directed by Stanley DonenGene Kelly's agility, virility, and Technicolor smile were a virtual refutation of the gloomy fatalism of film noir heroes like Mitchum and Bogart. Thus it's only a short leap from Kelly's "Slaughter on Tenth Avenue" ballet, danced with Vera-Ellen in "Words and Music".
Vera-Ellen kissing Gene Kelly in "On the Town" (1949) directed by Stanley Donen & Gene Kelly
Kelly may have been born in Pittsburgh, but it was a Manhattanite's brashness he brought to the Arthur Freed musical unit at MGM -which returned him, at his and Stanley Donen's request, to the streets of New York for their plein air masterpiece "On the Town" in 1949.
Gene Kelly and Rita Hayworth in "Cover Girl" (1944) directed by Charles Vidor
In most of his films, he played the hyperathletic sexual initiator of partners like Judy Garland, Vera-Ellen, Debbie Reynolds, or Leslie Caron. That his 'American in Paris' character was essentially priapic is revealed amid the dreamy Impressionist artifice of the Moulin Rouge ballet, in which Kelly dances in a skintight bodysuit before the splayed skirts of the cancan girls.
Only Cyd Charisse could bring the frenetic Kelly to a standstill, as she did from a sitting position with one long imperious leg in "Singin' in the Rain". "MGM didn't know what they had with Cyd, did they?" Kelly said to me when I interviewed him at his Beverly Hills home in March. Source: www.genekellyscene.com

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